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i got a set of avid j5's the rear brake always seemed to have disproportionally less braking power than the fronts. i am fully aware the front brakes have most of the braking power vs the rears.

i have to pull the lever very far (near the handlebars) to get a response from the brakes, and the response is good. i'd rather they be real sensitive so i can pump them rapidly with one finger.

i had the brakes bled professionally at the bike shop recently. (the bike isn't that old to begin with) it didn't solve the problem. is there a way to adjust them? how about that little hex nut inside the lever? would that fix the reach issue?

:edit:
could this be an issue with the rear hose being more than twice the length of the front hose? do i have to physically pull the lever farther to push the fluid farther distances?

could this be an issue with the rear hose being more than twice the length of the front hose?

Yes, in two ways:
1) longer hose is harder to bleed "perfectly". You may have small bubbles all along its length, making the braking mushier.
2) IF the brake hose expands a little by the pressure, then a longer hose means that you're losing more volume to to hose expansion in the rear.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lebowski

do i have to physically pull the lever farther to push the fluid farther distances?

No. Fluids are considered incompressible, so any change at one end should immediately be translated ito the corresponding change at the other end.

Lever reach is only going to change the starting point of the lever, it's used to accommodate hand size.
J5s should work better than that, suspect your shop didn't do such a hot job of bleeding or didn't solve another issue that may exist (and they should have investigated if they couldn't solve the problem with the bleed)...

So, I can bleed brakes quite well on a car, and I *think* I know how to bleed brakes on a bike (squeeze a couple times, hold the squeeze, slightly loosen the bleed valve and let fluid come out, close the bleed valve, build pressure back up, wash, rinse, repeat, all the while making sure the fluid level in the reservoir doesn't get low), but am I missing something, because I have the same problem with my rear brakes on my MTB (Shimano America LX hydraulic discs) The rear brake won't lock up the rear tire when I am going downhill, and it will squeak horrendously after I brake with it for about 5-10 seconds

So, am I missing something?

Sorry to threadjack, BTW, but I have the same exact problem, just different brand of brakes.

So, I can bleed brakes quite well on a car, and I *think* I know how to bleed brakes on a bike (squeeze a couple times, hold the squeeze, slightly loosen the bleed valve and let fluid come out, close the bleed valve, build pressure back up, wash, rinse, repeat, all the while making sure the fluid level in the reservoir doesn't get low), but am I missing something, because I have the same problem with my rear brakes on my MTB (Shimano America LX hydraulic discs) The rear brake won't lock up the rear tire when I am going downhill, and it will squeak horrendously after I brake with it for about 5-10 seconds

So, am I missing something?

Sorry to threadjack, BTW, but I have the same exact problem, just different brand of brakes.

Not same problem, OP just wants to engage sooner, says they work fine once they engage. In your case not enough info, could be a variety of issues but I'd look at pad/rotor contamination.